Histone synthesis during early embryogenesis in Xenopus laevis

African Clawed Toad)t. E. William Byrd, Jr., *·$ and Harold E. Kasinsky abstract: Electrophoretic and chromatographic experiments indicate that histo...
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Histone Synthesis during Early Embryogenesis in Xenopus Zaevis (South African Clawed Toad) t E. William Byrd, Jr., *,$ and Harold E. Kasinsky

ABSTRACT: Electrophoretic and chromatographic experiments indicate that histone synthesis takes place during the cleavage and swimming embryo stages of development in X. laecis. Furthermore, the major classes of histones (I, 11, 111, and IV) made during these different stages appear to be qualitatively the same, as shown by electrophoresis on polyacrylamide gels and by Amberlite chromatography, and include histones similar to those found in adult somatic tissues of this amphibian. Experiments utilizing polyacrylamide gels show that these proteins coelectrophorese with known histone markers I, IIbl, and I11 from trout testes and histone IV from peas. Individual basic proteins were purified from 8 M urea-2 M LiCl extracts of total embryo protein by carboxymethyl-

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re histones synthesized prior to gastrulation during the period of rapid cellular division in the early development of the amphibian embryo? If so, are these newly synthesized histones qualitatively the same or different at progressive stages of development ? We have investigated these questions by looking at the pattern of basic protein synthesis in early embryos of Xenopus laecis using a combination of chromatographic and electrophoretic techniques. In particular, we have focused on the synthesis of basic proteins during the cleavage and swimming embryo stages when the patterns of R N A synthesis are known to be markedly different. In the course of a study on ribosomal protein synthesis in X. lneuis embryos, Hallberg and Brown (1969) noted that about 8 of'the total protein synthesized by cleaving embryos pulsed with 14C02eluted as a single peak from a carboxymethylcellulose column. Kasinsky (1969) observed that electrophoresis of this radioactive peak on acrylamide gels showed the presence of two radioactive bands which were distinct from known ribosomal proteins and which migrated similarly t o histone fractions isolated from adult somatic tissues. The experiments discussed in this paper now demonstrate that these two radioactive bands present in extracts both of cleaving and swimming X . laevis embryos represent the synthesis of the major classes of histones. A preliminary communication of this work has been published (Kasinsky and Byrd, 1972).

t From the Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver 8, British Columbia, Canada. Receiced December 28, 1971. This study has been supported in part by Grant No. A5854 of the National Research Council of Canada and was initiated at the Deoartment of Embryology, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Baltimore, Md., while H . E. I